In Sweden, elderly care has been transferred from the county councils to th
e municipalities, resulting in changes in the work tasks of nurses. Today,
nurses within municipal health and medical care carry sole responsibility f
or large groups of care receivers, especially during evenings and weekends.
A consequence of this heavy work load is that the nurses have to delegate
a number of tasks to subordinate staff. Drug administration is a task which
is often delegated. Cases of malpractice involving drug administration, re
ported from the municipal health and medical service to the regional superv
isory units of the National Board of Health and Welfare during a 3-year per
iod, have been analysed in order to gain a deeper understanding of the unde
rlying causes of malpractice. In addition, interviews were conducted with e
ight nurses, the objective being to find out how they rate their knowledge
within this area. The analysis showed that the majority of errors occurred
in nursing homes and that the most common errors were administration of the
wrong drug, and levels of drugs administered exceeding the prescribed ones
. These errors were also common among subordinate staff who had been delega
ted responsibility for drug administration. Of the nurses interviewed, six
out of eight had been close to making errors or had noticed a colleague mak
ing an error in conjunction with drug handling. Not all nurses reported err
ors made to the physician in charge immediately on discovery. It is conclud
ed that through the transformation of elderly care, nurses working within m
unicipal health and medical care have been given a new professional role. T
his places new demands on their competence, requiring them to make independ
ent judgements and to take their own initiatives.